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F1 takes baby-steps to Chicago GP

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Formula 1 registers several trademarks for a race in Chicago

 

oracle red bull racing rb18 rides the chicago l train in chicago, illinois, usa on september 20, 2023Chris Tedes/ Red Bull Content Pool

 

The city of Chicago could be hosting another street race or not. The licensing arm of Formula 1 has registered several trademarks, all to secure names for a race in the Windy City. They include “Formula 1 Grand Prix of Chicago,” “Grand Prix of Chicago,” “Chicago Grand Prix,” and “Formula 1 Chicago Grand Prix.” All the names were registered last week; Greg Engle reports for Autoweek.

While trademark names can be registered without committing to any event, the move could be the first step towards another race in the U.S. F1 returned to the US in 2012 with the US GP at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. In the ensuing years they’ve added a race in Miami and last season staged the inaugural Las Vegas GP, which by many measures was a big success.

F1’s popularity in America has exploded thanks mainly to the Netflix series “Drive To Survive,” F1’s commercial rights owner, Liberty Media, has been eager to build on that popularity.

 

F1 has made several demonstration appearances in Chicago, including in 2019 at Chicago Field and most recently last September when Red Bull made a “show run” on a 2,000-foot temporary “pop-up” circuit down Madison Street and in the parking lots surrounding the United Center.

NASCAR held its first street race in Chicago last summer and is set to return there later this year. The 2.2-mile street course around Grant Park takes several weeks to set up and theoretically could host other forms of racing, setting up the intriguing possibility of a NASCAR-Formula 1 doubleheader.

That won’t happen this season, at least. F1 announced their 2024 schedule last July, and NASCAR did so in October. However, neither sanctioning body has revealed anything for 2025 yet, so the speculation could continue for months. Should NASCAR return to the streets of Chicago in 2025, given the road closures that come with the setup of a street course, it would make sense to use that same course for an F1 event.

For now, at least F1 owns the rights to a race in Chicago, at least the name.

 

This victory is historic-Ibrahim Diakité

Man of the Match hails his country’s first progress since 1976 in the knockout stages of the CAF Africa Cup of Nations

 

Guinea's midfielder #11 Mohamed Bayo celebrates scoring.

Guinea’s midfielder #11 Mohamed Bayo celebrates scoring. Photograph: Franck Fife/AFP/Getty Images

 

Ibrahim Diakite was named TotalEnergies Man of the Match after Guinea’s 1-0 victory over Equatorial Guinea. It was a well-deserved designation for the player who was the author of the cross, which brought Mohamed Bayo’s goal at the end of added time.

 

In a post-match press conference, the player hailed a historic victory, especially since it was the first time since 1976 they won in the knockout stages of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations.

 

“This victory is historic; no one in history has managed to do that. This victory is for the people who have suffered for a long time,” he declared.

 

The Le Havre striker now dreams of going all the way.

 

“We are delighted; it was hard, and we managed to hold on until the end. I hope we will continue like this and go to the end,” he said.

 

Commenting on the match, Ibrahim Diakite said: “We had a complicated first half, we couldn’t get our game going. The coach told us to keep pushing because there would be opportunities sooner or later, and that’s what we managed to do.”

He also praised the work of his teammates, who, from his point of view, were all good in the match.

 

“The whole team could have had the Man of the Match trophy. Everyone was perfect, but even more important is that we are qualified,” he concluded.

 

Diakité dedicated the award to his mother.

 

Heartbreak for Equatorial Guinea

As Bayo snatches a late victory for Guinea

Guinea's midfielder #11 Mohamed Bayo celebrates with teammates after the victory.

Guinea’s midfielder #11 Mohamed Bayo celebrates with teammates after the victory. Photograph: Franck Fife/AFP/Getty Images

 

Mohamed Bayo broke the hearts of Equatorial Guinea on Sunday evening with just seconds left on the clock to snatch a late 1-0 victory for Guinea in a TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire Round of 16 clash played at the Alassane Ouattara Stadium in Ebimpe.

 

The Guinea derby had all the ingredients of a knockout encounter, with both sides having a go at each other from the onset.

 

Equatorial Guinea came into the clash with good momentum following their impressive first-place finish in a tough Group A consisting of Cote d’Ivoire and Nigeria. At the same time, Guinea snuck into the round of 16 as one of the four best third finishers of the group stages.

 

With both sides creating chances, a golden opportunity was presented to Equatorial Guinea just after the hour mark when Ivan Salvador was fouled in the box for the in-form Emilio Nsue to step up but saw his penalty denied by the woodwork to the relief of Guinea.

 

The missed penalty would have been a massive advantage to Equatorial Guinea, which was a man-down following the sending-off of Frederico Nchama.

 

With just a few seconds before the end of the ninety minutes, a swift build-up by Guinea concluded with Ibrahim Diakite sending a delightful ball into the area, which was cleverly headed into the near post by Bayo to seal a place in the quarter-finals for the seventh time in 14 appearances.

 

Reactions:

 

Kaba Diawara – Guinea coach

 

“This victory means a lot. We knew the historic nature of the match. We knew that since 1976, Guinea had not won a knockout match. It’s a feeling of pride. There was a lot of criticism, but I knew this group had quality, and we proved it today. Everyone prepared well. It’s a group we built piece by piece, and it’s a reward for them and us as the coaches.

 

“We now look ahead. We want to go as far as possible. We will wait for the next opponent and prepare better”.

 

Juan Micha – Equatorial Guinea coach

 

“I think our team was at a good level. We played until the end. We fought until the end, but that’s also football. I congratulate the opposing opponent. I think we had control at the start of the match, but when you have a key player sent off, it becomes difficult, especially if you have an opponent putting pressure on you. They scored a goal in the last minute, which demoralized us but I congratulate my players, they were good in the match”.

 

Statistical

 

Guinea wins for the first time in a direct elimination match at CAN CAF TotalEnergies since 1976

 

Chiefs expect to play RB Isiah Pacheco

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As preparations for AFC Championship Game vs. Ravens gather steam

 

 

Kansas City’s biggest backfield threat should be a go with a Super Bowl LVIII berth on the line, Bobby Kownack reports for The NFL.

 

Chiefs running back Isiah Pacheco is expected to play in Sunday’s AFC Championship Game against the Baltimore Ravens despite ankle and toe injuries, NFL Network’s James Palmer reported Saturday night, per a source.

 

Pacheco sat out practice on Wednesday and Thursday. Still, he managed limited participation on Friday — something Palmer reported was the plan going into the week — and the positive momentum appears to continue to game day.

 

The hard-running back has been a difference-maker for the Chiefs throughout his dynamic second year in the league.

 

An underrated part of Patrick Mahomes’ offense, Pacheco carried the rock 24 times in the Chiefs’ wild-card win versus the Dolphins, and he contributed all but two of the team’s RB carries last week against the Bills.

 

Clyde Edwards-Helaire, who handled the other two rushing attempts, will likely again spell Pacheco occasionally and need to be ready should either of the 24-year-old’s injuries flare up to cause problems during the game.

 

With Pacheco active, Kansas City will better be able to attack Baltimore’s only discernable weakness on defense. The Ravens boast the league’s top-ranked scoring unit and rank sixth in passing defense, but they’re middle of the road, 14th, against the run.

 

The Chiefs and Ravens kick off in Baltimore at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday.

Detroit safeguards its cornerstone pieces

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QB Jared Goff, Lions to have contract extension talks in off-season

 

Quarterback Jared Goff

 

As the Lions prepare for Sunday’s NFC Championship Game against the 49ers, Detroit wants one of its cornerstone pieces to be part of the team’s foreseeable future, Christian Gonzales reports for The NFL.

 

Detroit is expected to have contract extension talks with quarterback Jared Goff this offseason, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported on NFL GameDay Morning, per sources informed of the situation.

 

Rapoport added that the deal is expected to make Goff one of the highest-paid quarterbacks in the league.

 

Goff has had one of the best seasons in his career, leading the Lions to a 12-5 record, an NFC North title (the team’s first since 1993), and a chance to make his second Super Bowl appearance. The 29-year-old QB joined Hall of Famer Peyton Manning as the only QB drafted No. 1 overall to win two-plus playoff games with multiple franchises, per NFL Research.

 

This season, Goff threw 30 touchdowns and 12 interceptions and finished with a career-best 67.3% completion percentage. Surrounding Goff with a talented young core with Amon-Ra St. Brown, Sam LaPorta, and Jahmyr Gibbs has paid dividends for Goff and everyone involved in offensive coordinator Ben Johnson’s offense.

 

Detroit’s shift from playoff hopefuls to a Super Bowl contender began in the 2022 season. Head coach Dan Campbell’s squad went 8-2 in its final 10 games and narrowly missed the postseason. The hot streak wasn’t a fluke to begin the 2023 season. Detroit started this season going 8-2 and proved to the league it would be playing football in late January.

 

Once considered a “bridge quarterback” after being traded by the Rams for Matthew Stafford, Goff has seemingly shut down that narrative and emerged as a franchise QB for the Lions.

 

General manager Brad Holmes said it was a “lazy” storyline earlier in the season and that he was “very proud” of Goff’s play at the beginning of the 2023 season. With a trip to Super Bowl LVIII on the line in Sunday’s road game against the 49ers, Holmes and the Lions view Goff as the long-term answer under center.

 

Top clashes in store in Czech Republic

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As major medallists descend on Ostrava

 

Miltiadis Tentoglou competes in the World Athletics Indoor Tour (© Copernicus Cup)

Previews


Miltiadis Tentoglou, Ewa Swoboda, Tom Walsh, and Freweyni Hailu are among the global and continental medallists who will want to make a statement when they compete at the Czech Indoor Gala – this season’s second World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold meeting – in Ostrava on Tuesday (30),  Jess Whittington reports for World Athletics.

 

Following the opening of the World Indoor Tour Gold event in Astana on Saturday, the Czech city’s Atleticka Hala will welcome athletes for its first meeting as part of the tour’s top tier.

 

They include Tentoglou, who has won Olympic, world, and world indoor titles over the past few years and aims to retain his crown at the World Athletics Indoor Championships Glasgow 24 in March. His campaign begins in Ostrava, where he will open his season against a field featuring Czech record-holder Radek Juska and his compatriot Petr Meindlschmid, plus Bulgaria’s world U20 silver medallist Bozhidar Saraboyukov and European bronze medallist Jules Pommery of France.

 

Tentoglou will have the meeting record of 8.21m in his sights when he returns on the hunt for a Czech Indoor Gala hat-trick following his victories in 2018 and 2020.

 

Like Tentoglou, New Zealand’s Walsh is a world indoor gold medallist, having claimed his crowns in Portland in 2016 and Birmingham in 2018. Unlike the Greek long jumper, however, Walsh has never competed at the Czech Indoor Gala, and despite having won the first of his four world indoor medals almost a decade ago, the meeting in Ostrava will be the Oceanian record-holder’s first-ever indoor competition outside of the World Indoor Championships.

 

Walsh will have some intense competition looking to deny him a win on his season opener. The 2017 world champion and two-time Olympic bronze medallist, who threw his area record of 22.90m during the epic world final in Doha in 2019, faces home favorite Tomas Stanek, who won the European indoor title in 2021, plus 2022 European gold medallist Filip Mihaljevic of Croatia.

 

Another European gold medallist, 2018 outdoor and 2019 indoor champion Michal Haratyk of Poland, plus Jamaican record-holder Rajindra Campbell, Nigeria’s Chukwuebuka Enekwechi, and USA’s 2022 NACAC champion Roger Steen are also in the line-up. Steen finished second in Astana on Saturday with a throw of 20.58m. At the same time, the competition in Ostrava offers a rematch between Enekwechi, Campbell, and Mihaljevic, who respectively finished second, third, and fourth behind world silver medallist Leonardo Fabbri at the World Indoor Tour Bronze meeting in Lodz on Saturday.

 

Slovenia’s world indoor bronze medallist Tina Sutej leads the women’s pole vault entries. The meeting record-holder, who cleared a national record of 4.82m to win her third title in Ostrava last year, will go up against Switzerland’s 2021 European indoor champion Angelica Moser, Italian record-holder Roberta Bruni and local favorite Amalie Svabikova.

 

Swoboda in Sprint spotlight

 

The women’s 60m meeting record will be threatened when Polish record-holder Swoboda returns to the Czech Indoor Gala. The 2019 European indoor champion, who won in Ostrava in 2018 and set her national record of 6.99 in 2022, ran a world lead of 7.04 in Lodz on Saturday, and a similar performance would see the eight-year-old meeting record of 7.10 tumble.

 

Ewa Swoboda in World Athletics Indoor Tour actionEwa Swoboda in World Athletics Indoor Tour action (© Copernicus Cup)

She’s not the only one who could attack the record, however. The in-form Patrizia van der Weken of Luxembourg ran a national record of 7.09 last weekend, and the field also features Jamaica’s Remona Burchell, Belgium’s Rani Rosius, and joint Czech record-holder Karolina Manasova.

 

Swoboda’s compatriot Pia Skrzyszowska also heads to Ostrava from a win. The 2021 winner in Ostrava clocked 7.85 in the heats and the same in the final to triumph in Lodz, and this time, faces another athlete who will be buoyed by recent results – Ireland’s Sarah Lavin, who set PBs of 7.93 and then 7.91 in Astana.

 

They are joined in Ostrava by Nadine Visser of the Netherlands, who holds the meeting record of 7.86, plus Finnish record-holder Reetta Hurske and USA’s Alaysha Johnson, who clocked 7.87 to win the Czech Indoor Gala in 2023 and went on to set a PB of 7.82 and win the US indoor title.

 

Like the women’s 60m hurdles, the men’s 60m features heats before the final. Britain’s European 100m bronze medallist Jeremiah Azu will look to repeat as champion after his victory last year in 6.58, a time just 0.02 off his PB.

 

Among his competition will be Italy’s Samuele Ceccarelli, who ran 6.47 en route to winning the European indoor title last year and clocked 6.65 in Dortmund last weekend, finishing fourth in a race won by Germany’s Joshua Hartmann, who ran 6.58 in the heats and 6.59 in the final there.

 

Home favorites Jan Veleba, who won at the Czech Indoor Gala in 2022, and national indoor champion Zdenek Stromsik also line up, as do 2019 European indoor champion Jan Volko and Japan’s Yoshihide Kiryu.

 

In the men’s 200m, Israel’s Blessing Afrifah will contest his second-ever short track race over the distance, following the national record of 20.95 he ran on his debut in Metz last year. The 20-year-old, who clocked 19.96 to win the world U20 200m title in Cali in 2022, faces a field featuring Czech record-holder Ondrej Macik.

 

After finishing top two in the second of two 400m races in Astana on Saturday, Czechia’s world mixed relay bronze medallist Patrick Sorm and three-time world indoor champion Pavel Maslak will clash again. Sorm ran 47.01 ahead of Maslak’s 47.70 there, and they will need to build on that if they are to hold off a field featuring national record-holder Matej Krsek and Hungarian record-holder Attila Molnar.

 

World 4x400m gold medallist Lieke Klaver set a 400m meeting record of 51.00 on her season opener in Ostrava last year and claimed European indoor silver. The program features two 400m races, and also among the entries are Poland’s 2018 European champion Justyna Swiety-Ersetic, Britain’s Jessie Knight, 2020 Czech Indoor Gala winner Lada Vondrova, her fellow world mixed 4x400m bronze medallist Tereza Petrzilkova and European U20 champion Lurdes Gloria Manuel.

 

Hailu and Meshesha in meeting’s mile debut

 

Ethiopia’s world indoor 800m silver medallist Freweyni Hailu and her compatriot Hirut Meshesha, the world indoor 1500m bronze medallist, will go head-to-head as the Czech Indoor Gala hosts a women’s mile race for the first time.

 

Hailu, who claimed silver in the mile at the World Athletics Road Running Championships Riga 23 in October, has a track mile PB of 4:14.79 set outdoors in Monaco last year, while Meshesha clocked 4:20.00 in Oslo in June. Both have racing experience in Ostrava, having previously competed at the city’s outdoor Golden Spike meeting.

 

Freweyni Hailu races in TorunFreweyni Hailu races in Torun (© Copernicus Cup)

Joining them on the start line at the Atleticka hala will be Belgium’s 2021 European indoor 1500m champion Elise Vanderelst, Romania’s Claudia Bobocea, Sofia Thogersen of Denmark and Czech record-holder Simona Vrzalova.

 

The men’s 1500m meeting record of 3:35.93 was set by Britain’s Elliot Giles in 2022, and that could be a target for a field that features his compatriot Jake Heyward, the 2022 European silver medallist, plus Portugal’s Isaac Nader and Czech record-holder Filip Sasinek.

 

The men’s 800m entries include Czech athletes Filip Snejdr and Jakub Dudycha, the European U20 champion, as well as Poland’s 2021 European indoor silver medallist Mateusz Borkowski, Italy’s Catalin Tecuceanu, British champion Daniel Rowden and Botswana’s world sixth-place finisher Tshepiso Masalela, making his short track debut.

 

Elephants hope to make amends

As Côte d’Ivoire takes on the Teranga Lions in a clash of heavyweights

 

 

It’s all set. Defending champions Senegal will come up against host Côte d’Ivoire on Monday, 29 January, at the Charles Konan Bani Stadium, Yamoussoukro, for the Round of 16 clash of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Côte d’Ivoire 2023.

 

The game promises to be a tough encounter based on the ambitions of the two sides in the ongoing TotalEnergies CAF AFCON Côte d’Ivoire 2023. With the Elephants looking to correct the wrongs of the group stage, they will go all in.

 

The Teranga Lions qualified from their group unbeaten and hope to continue with the same energy in the knockout stage.

 

Côte d’Ivoire wants to compensate for their poor showing in the group stage, in which they progressed with only 3 points as one of the best third-placed teams.

 

The Elephants will want to compensate their home fans for the poor showing in their last two games against Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea by eliminating Senegal and qualifying for the quarter-finals.

 

Aliou Cisse – Senegal coach

 

 “Our team is going through a reasonable period after three matches, where we achieved good results in the group stage, and I am satisfied with it. We are in an excellent state to focus. The statistics are there, and I cannot change the past and the results. We are in the present, and we will remain focused. We are in the eighth final, against a good Côte d’Ivoire team. We will play a tough match. If we win, we will continue the adventure; if we lose, we will return home.

 

“We qualified with 9 points and the opponent with 3 points. This does not matter. Now, a new competition has begun. Côte d’Ivoire remains a major team in Africa, with good players. The defeat in their last two matches remains just an accident; they will show another performance in front of their fans.”

 

Moussa Nyakhate – Senegal defender 

 

“We worked well this week. We must remain focused on the way we play in defense and attack. We will remain focused on ourselves in the match, and our goal remains to win. The Côte d’Ivoire national team is good, and they have players with good potential, and we greatly respect them. The atmosphere within the Senegalese team is great. Everyone is in good condition. We have a wonderful group of veterans mentoring the young players.”

 

Faye Emers – Côte d’Ivoire coach

 

“We prepared well for the Senegal match and will enter the game with great confidence. The players are motivated. I know the group well and have been with them for a year and a half. The players know what to expect from them in the Senegal match. We will enter the game with reasonable confidence. We have worked well since I came to head the national team. Côte d’Ivoire will remain Côte d’Ivoire even though we did not perform well in the group stage. If we ask Senegal which team they want to face in the last 16, they will choose another team with the best third-place other than Côte d’Ivoire.

 

Jean-Michael Seri – Côte d’Ivoire midfielder 

 

“When you are competitive, you want to win the continental title, especially when you host the competition. In this competition, anything can happen. Things have passed, and we must look into the future, where the match against Senegal awaits us. I do not want to talk about what happened. There will be a new competition within this competition in the knockout round, and we want to progress with the new coach, who is also a big brother to us.”

 

Edesa smashes Osaka course record

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As Maeda breaks Asian record

 

Workenesh Edesa wins in Osaka (© AFP / Getty Images)

Workenesh Edesa took over two minutes off the Osaka Women’s Marathon course record, winning the World Athletics Platinum Label road race in an equal PB of 2:18:51 on Sunday (28).

 

In a close race, the Ethiopian won by just eight seconds from long-time leader Honami Maeda of Japan, who clocked an Asian record of 2:18:59. Her time also puts her in a solid position to claim a spot on Japan’s team for the Paris Olympics later this year.

 

Five women – Edesa, Maeda, three-time winner Mizuki Matsuda, Ugandan record-holder Stella Chesang and Sayaka Sato – ran together for the first half, passing through 5km in 16:32 and 10km in 32:59. By the time they reached halfway in 1:09:46 – comfortably on schedule to break Matsuda’s course record of 2:20:52 – they had a lead of more than two minutes on the chase pack.

 

Maeda tried to push on in the second half, and the lead pack soon became strung out, Matsuda being one of the first to fall behind. Maeda built up a five-second lead over Edesa at 30km, passing through that checkpoint in 1:38:36, while Chesang was further back in third, a few seconds ahead of Sato.

 

But after another kilometer, Edesa caught up with Maeda, and the Ethiopian gradually built up an 11-second lead by 35km (1:54:46). Maeda refused to let Edesa get out of her sights. Chesang appeared to have a comfortable 24-second lead over Sato, while Matsuda was a distant fifth, two minutes behind the leader.

 

Edesa held her lead through to the finish, with Maeda chasing hard behind. Edesa crossed the line in 2:18:51, with Maeda taking second in 2:18:59, taking 13 seconds off the Japanese and Asian record set in 2005 by 2004 Olympic champion Mizuki Noguchi.

 

But the real drama was unfolding behind as Matsuda passed Sato and then Chesang to make her way into third spot, crossing the line in 2:23:07. Chesang took fourth (2:23:36), more than a minute ahead of Sato. Germany’s Katharina Steinruck – daughter of three-time Osaka winner Katrin Dorre-Heinig – was sixth in a PB of 2:24:56.

 

“My goal was to break the course record,” said Edesa, who now focuses on success at the Boston Marathon in a few months.

 

Maeda, whose previous PB was 2:22:32, also admitted she had records on her mind leading up to today’s race. “In the later part of the race, I wasn’t sure if I could accomplish my goal because the wind and rain hit me in the final stages.”

 

Leading results

 

1 Workenesh Edesa (ETH) 2:18:51
2 Honami Maeda (JPN) 2:18:59
3 Mizuki Matsuda (JPN) 2:23:07
4 Stella Chesang (UGA) 2:23:36
5 Sayaka Sato (JPN) 2:24:43
6 Katharina Steinruck (GER) 2:24:56
7 Natsumi Matsushita (JPN) 2:25:10
8 Yuna Daito (JPN) 2:25:16
9 Madoka Nakano (JPN) 2:26:50
10 Mayu Nishikawa (JPN) 2:26:50

 

Jannik Sinner wins Australia Open

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JANNIK SINNER SINKS DANIIL MEDVEDEV IN EPIC COMEBACK TO SEAL MAIDEN GRAND SLAM TITLE

 

pictureDaniil Medvedev and Jannik Sinner of Italy embrace at the net after their Men’s Singles Final match during the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne ParkImage credit: Getty Images.
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Jannik Sinner produced a legendary comeback from two sets down to defeat Daniil Medvedev in a titanic battle in the final of the Australian Open to claim his maiden Grand Slam title in style.

 

The Italian looked down and out as Medvedev raced into a commanding lead. Still, he returned in a memorable resurgence to take the title most thrillingly and entertainingly at Melbourne Park.

 

Jannik Sinner concluded a monumental run at the 2024 Australian Open with the ultimate glory as he stormed back to beat Daniil Medvedev in a five-set epic, 3-6 3-6 6-4 6-4 6-3, in the final at Melbourne Park.
For Medvedev, in the end, this was not the joyous conclusion he desperately desired after what has been a monumental effort in Melbourne this fortnight, as he could not enjoy following up his maiden Grand Slam triumph at the US Open in 2021.
“I want to congratulate Jannik,” he said in a typically gracious speech. “Today, you showed again why you deserve it. You fought till the end and managed to raise your level. You and your team are doing an amazing job. You win many tournaments and make many finals, and that’s probably not your last Grand Slam. I hope to try and get the next one because it’s been three finals in a row. I’ll try my best to do better next time, but congrats to you. You deserve it.”
Sinner, though, was left to celebrate what will surely be the first of many Grand Slam titles as he emulated his compatriot Flavia Pennetta, who won the women’s singles title at the 2015 US Open and had until Sunday been the most recent Italian to have enjoyed Grand Slam singles glory.
“Daniil, I want to congratulate you and your team for an amazing tournament again,” Sinner said in his victory speech. “I know we played in so many finals together already, but I find something where I can improve every match, and you make me a much better player. Your effort has been awesome throughout the tournament; the hours on the court and today’s effort, running for every ball, is remarkable. I hope you can lift this trophy; I’m sure you can. I wish you all the best for the season.”
The indefatigable Medvedev broke the record for the most time spent on court in a single Grand Slam – a remarkable effort in itself – but it was the 22-year-old from Italy who emerged after three hours and 44 minutes with the crown after a famous comeback from two sets down.
It was heartbreaking for the No. 3 seed, who lost out in the three finals in Melbourne. ‘The Octopus’ came into the showdown having racked up quite an incredible 20 hours and 33 minutes on the court and battled through three five-set matches en route to the showpiece match. Still, he could not sustain his level after two wonderfully aggressive sets.
In clinching glory, Sinner became the fifth Italian player to win a Grand Slam title and the first at Melbourne Park as he refused to accept his fate when looking out of the contest after two sets and ultimately outlasted his exhausted opponent.
Medvedev had won six of the nine previous matches he had played against Sinner, and he got off to an electrifying start by constantly coming to the net, shortening points, and deservedly taking an early break of serve.
The No. 3 seed’s ultra-attacking intent continued finely as he consolidated his break of serve and kept Sinner extremely quiet. Indeed, it was no surprise when he clinched the opening set with little resistance after 35 minutes.
The Italian and his coaching camp knew that he had to make a stronger start to the second set and adapt to Medvedev’s assertive play, but it was certainly not easy for him as he sought to do so. The fourth seed eventually had to battle through an extended, grueling deuce to hold serve under enormous pressure in his opening game.
The ease with which Medvedev was consistently able to hold serve was in stark contrast to Sinner’s having to endure an epic brawl in seemingly every game on his delivery. Eventually, the pressure took its toll on the No. 4 seed as Medvedev ruthlessly broke serve once more to lead 3-1 in the second set.
While the pre-match narrative may have been that the third seed would be physically and mentally exhausted after his marathon exploits in the previous rounds, Sinner looked sluggish. In contrast, he seemed incredibly sharp around the court as he consolidated once more.
Medvedev had to endure a bit of a nervy wobble on his serve before he closed out the second set in 49 minutes, but all it did was demonstrate his determination and resolve that the day would belong to him.
Sinner was visibly frustrated at the start of the third set, but he kept his composure and established himself on the scoreboard early on to make his opponent work for every game. This passage of play would later prove crucial.

Cape Verde, Mauritania share a fantasy

Blue Sharks, Lions of Chinguetti, in pursuit of a dream

 

 

Abidjan’s Félix Houphouët Boigny stadium hosts an interesting TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Cote d’Ivoire 2023 round of 16 clashes between two sides that have dispelled the underdog’s tag.

 

Cape Verde faces off against Mauritania in an exciting duel of two sides that have caused significant upsets in Cote d’Ivoire over the last few weeks.

 

For Al-Murabitun (الْمُرَابِطُون) Lions of Chinguetti of Mauritania, their first-ever TotalEnergies CAF AFCON win secured them their first knockout spot, where they will meet with the Tubarões Azuis (Blue Sharks) of Cape Verde, who have been in fine form with a top finish in Group B that had heavyweights such as Ghana and Egypt.

 

Both coaches oozed confidence at their pre-match press conference on Sunday, 28 January, ahead of the Monday evening clash.

 

This is what they had to say:

 

Bubista – Cape Verde coach

 

“Mauritania is a difficult opponent. This team showed cohesion and quality. Their victory against Algeria is well deserved. They have a solid defense. This will be a tactical encounter, and we must play our cards well and not falter in the last four”.

 

Tiago Correia – Cape Verde striker

 

“We are aware of the importance of these matches. For us, this is something unique. We are focused on the same goal. We just have victory in sight”.

 

Amir Abdou – Mauritania coach

 

“Cape Verde is an attractive team. They score many goals and concede, too, which is a loophole we will try to use. I have a competitive group, and I know we are capable of anything”.

 

Lamine Ba – Mauritania defender

 

“We got off to a bad start, but now a new competition is starting. We know that the Mauritanian authorities have put several things in place so that our supporters are present during this match, and we are counting heavily on them”.